Rep. Anthony Weiner announces his resignation

U.S. Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., leaves his home for a press conference, Thursday, June 16, 2011, in Queens, New York. Weiner has decided to resign his seat in Congress after a two-week scandal spawned by lewd and even X-rated photos the New York lawmaker took of himself and sent online to numerous women.

NEW YORK (AP) — Embattled New York Congressman Anthony Weiner announces his resignation from Congress.

Earlier: WASHINGTON (AP) — Rep. Anthony Weiner will resign his seat in Congress after a scandal spawned by the lewd and even X-rated photos of himself, the New York lawmaker sent online to numerous women, relieved Democratic officials said Thursday.

"It's my understanding that later in the day he will have a news conference," House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi said without elaboration. Weiner's office said he would talk to reporters at 2 p.m. EDT in Brooklyn.

Weiner, 46, has been on leave from the House and at a treatment facility at an undisclosed location since last weekend. He has not been seen in public since telling reporters on Saturday morning he intended to return to work.

One official said Weiner telephoned Pelosi and Rep. Steve Israel of New York, the head of the party campaign committee, on Wednesday evening to tell them of his plans to quit.

They had pressured him to resign, concluding the relentless media focus on his activities was complicating the Democrats' efforts to position themselves politically for the 2012 elections.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity, citing the private nature of the conversations.

Weiner's decision to give up his House seat marks the end of a nearly three-week sex scandal without the sex — an event that resulted from the brash New Yorker's use of social media such as Twitter and Facebook.

It also signals an ignominious pause if not an end in a once-promising political career. Weiner ran for New York mayor in 2005, and had talked of seeking the office again.

He at first denied having sent any inappropriate photos, then recanted in a remarkable news conference 10 days ago at which he admitted having exchanged inappropriate messages with several women.

His confession triggered a tabloid-style frenzy in print and online that only grew more pronounced a few days later when an X-rated photo of the 46-year-old lawmaker surfaced on a website.

After initially calling for a House ethics committee investigation, Pelosi dramatically ramped up the pressure on Saturday when she joined with Israel and Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz of Florida, leader of the Democratic National Committee, in calling on Weiner to step down.

Within hours, Weiner disclosed his plans to enter treatment, and Pelosi's aides made it known that did not negate her demand for a resignation.

President Barack Obama added to the pressure on Monday, saying it he were in Weiner's situation, he would step down.

Several officials have said in recent days that Weiner was reluctant to make any decision about his career without speaking with his wife, Huma Abedin, a top aide to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton who had been overseas since shortly after the scandal broke. The trip ended Tuesday night.

Abedin is pregnant with the couple's first child.

Weiner's outspoken, in-your-face style cheered liberal supporters and angered conservatives. He even irritated some party leaders in 2009 when he led the charge for a government-run health care system long after the White House had made it clear that Obama was opposed.

Weiner's district includes parts of Queens and Brooklyn. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has the authority to call a special election to fill the seat once the congressman submits his resignation.

Weiner's political problems began on May 28 when BigGovernment.com, a website run by conservative commentator Andrew Breitbart, posted a lewd photograph of an underwear-clad crotch and said it had been sent from Weiner's Twitter account to a Seattle woman.

Initially, Weiner lied, saying his account had been hacked. But he pointedly did not report the incident to law enforcement — a step that could have led the way to charges of wrongdoing far more serious than mere sexting.

Additionally, his public denials were less than solid — particularly when he told an interviewer that he could not "say with certitude" that he wasn't the man in the underwear photo.

Weiner's spokesman said the photo was just "a distraction" and that the congressman "doesn't know the person named by the hacker."

The congressman denied sending the photo and said he had retained an attorney and hired a private security company to figure out how someone could pull off such a prank.

Weiner entered politics as an aide to then-Rep. Chuck Schumer, who represented parts of Brooklyn.

Now a senator, Schumer was one of only a few senior party leaders who refrained from calling publicly on his protégé to quit as the furor enveloped him in recent days.

Weiner served on the New York City Council from 1992 until his election to the House in 1998, taking over the seat vacated by Schumer when he made his successful Senate bid.

Weiner's racy online escapades were a gift to the New York tabloids. The New York Post labeled the affair "The Battle of the Bulge" and called on Weiner to "Fall on Your Sword."

The media spotlight stayed on the congressman, upsetting Democratic Party leaders who wanted nothing more than to see Weiner quit the House and bring an end to the sordid affair.

On Friday, the congressman acknowledged he'd exchanged private Twitter messages with a 17-year-old girl from Delaware. She'd heard Weiner speak during a high-school trip to Washington and had become an admirer.

The police were looking into the matter Saturday. Weiner said there was nothing inappropriate in their messages.

"The ones who utter morality, but, behind closed doors are twisted freaks with a dark side, are worse than what any shameless perverted lib amounts to."
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I don't know dude. Attacking the press and waxing sanctimonious about how "silly" it all is whilst lying through your teeth grates on my nerves pretty bad. I personally wish he'd have stuck around. I think it would be great for a Republican presidential hopeful to make an ad that starts out with San Fran Nan talking about "The Most Ethical Congress Ever", interspersed with cuts of Weiner going off on interviewers. Cut back to snippets of the Charlie Rangel investigation, throw in a couple Obama classics and really get the public focused on just what a sorry bill of goods they got sold in 2008.

I don't get any personal enjoyment out of seeing someone fall. I do, however, think that Mr. Weiner needs to go to rehab for arrogance first before he even begins to think about worrying over the sex addiction. In fact if he can beat the arrogance problem, the sex problem might just take care of itself.